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    Weekend Event Planner

    These are the 10 best things to do in Dallas this weekend

    Alex Bentley
    Jul 13, 2023 | 6:00 am

    Theater and music make up the majority of events across Dallas this weekend, but the biggest one is the opening of an art experience unlike anything in the area. There will also be a film festival, four new local theater productions, a trio of concerts, and a chance to win fun playhouses.

    Below are the best ways to spend your precious free time this weekend. Want more options? Lucky for you, we have a much longer list of the city's best events.

    Thursday, July 13

    Asian Film Festival of Dallas
    The 2023 Asian Film Festival of Dallas will feature 18 feature films and five short films over four days, including opening night selection The Night Owl from Tae-Jim Ahn, closing night selection Drive from Park Dong-hee, and special screenings with filmmaker Q&As like Linh Tran’s Waiting for the Light to Change and Sing J Lee’s The Accidental Getaway Driver. Screenings take place through Sunday at Angelika Film Center Dallas.

    The Watering Hole Collective presents Spring Awakening
    The Watering Hole Collective will present its inaugural production, the Tony Award-winning musical, Spring Awakening. Based on the groundbreaking and controversial 1891 German play by Frank Wedekind, the musical tells the story of teenagers discovering the inner and outer tumult of adolescent sexuality set to a contemporary pop-rock score. Reimagining the 2006 hit for 2023, the Watering Hole Collective invites audiences to dive into the deeper messages of sexual awakening, youthful rebellion, and self discovery. The production runs through July 22 at Arts Mission Oak Cliff.

    Friday, July 14

    Meow Wolf: The Real Unreal
    Friday is the long-anticipated grand opening of Meow Wolf: The Real Unreal, where visitors embark on a journey through a technicolor wonderland that blends storytelling, technology, and immersive art. The experience encourages visitors to explore different dimensions of perspective and creativity through more than 30 rooms of multidimensional art. Visitors can choose to engage with a story about a family who has unknowingly unlocked portals to a different existence, or they can just enjoy the fun and weird art all on its own. Meow Wolf will be a permanent entertainment experience at Grapevine Mills.

    Dallas CASA presents Parade of Playhouses
    Dallas CASA's annual Parade of Playhouses features custom-designed and built children's playhouses on display and available to win by raffle. Playhouses run the gamut of style and design, from pop culture-inspired castles to modern, abstract designs and from tiny versions of North Dallas new construction to play-based climbing structures. All funds raised from the event, running at NorthPark Center through July 30, benefit the child victims of abuse or neglect served by Dallas CASA's volunteer advocates.

    MainStage Irving-Las Colinas presents The Underpants
    In the riotously funny farce, The Underpants, Louise and Theo Maske are a couple whose conservative existence is shattered when Louise's bloomers fall down in public. While her momentary display does not result in all-out scandal, it does attract two infatuated men, each of whom wants to rent the spare room in the Markes' home. Written by Steve Martin, the production runs through July 29 at Mainstage Irving-Las Colinas.

    Samantha Fish in concert with Jesse Dayton
    Singer/guitarist Samantha Fish has been playing her style of blues rock for almost 15 years, releasing her debut album, 2009's Live Bait, at the tender age of 20. She's gone on to release 10 more solo and collaborative albums, including the new Death Wish Blues with Jesse Dayton, with whom she will be co-headlining this special concert. They will play at Longhorn Ballroom, with Carolyn Wonderland as the opening act.

    Theatre Coppell presents Young Frankenstein
    Young Frankenstein is a musical stage adaptation of Mel Brooks’ brilliantly funny film. Frederick Frankenstein, grandson of the infamous inventor Doctor Frankenstein, reluctantly inherits the family estate in Transylvania. With the help of a hunchbacked sidekick named Igor and lab assistant Inga, Frederick finds himself following in the mad-scientist tradition of his ancestor, creating a monster for this century. When the monster escapes, hilarity abounds. The production runs through July 30 at Coppell Arts Center.

    Richardson Theatre Centre presents Boeing, Boeing
    A hit comedy similar in vein to Shakespeare’s comedies of merry misadventures and mistaken identities, Boeing Boeing tells the exploits of French bachelor Bernard and his lovely female flight attendants. In the past, Bernard has been able to juggle these women, but when the situation changes and all of the women end up at his apartment on the same day, Bernard struggles to keep them from learning the truth. The production runs through July 30 at Richardson Theatre Centre.

    Saturday, July 15

    The Polyphonic Spree 23rd Birthday Celebration
    The Polyphonic Spree, which was started by lead singer Tim Delaughter in 2000, will celebrate its 23rd year in existence by releasing its latest album, Salvage Enterprise. This performance at Longhorn Ballroom will feature the live debut of new material as well as past favorites to celebrate the band’s birthday.

    Ace Frehley in concert
    For people of a certain age, Ace Frehley will always be Spaceman from the rock band Kiss. But he left that band in 1982, so the majority of his career has been as a solo artist, even though he's never truly been able to leave his early days behind. Almost all of his seven solo albums, including 2020's Origins Vol. 2, have involved members of Kiss or been influenced by their music. He'll play at The Echo Lounge & Music Hall.

    Jesse Dayton and Samantha Fish
    Photo courtesy of Jesse Dayton and Samantha Fish

    Samantha Fish and Jesse Dayton will play at Longhorn Ballroom on July 14.

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    Movie Review

    Dallas gets showcased in witchy new movie Forbidden Fruits

    Alex Bentley
    Mar 26, 2026 | 3:24 pm
    Alexandra Shipp, Lili Reinhart, and Victoria Perfetti in Forbidden Fruits
    Photo courtesy of IFC
    Alexandra Shipp, Lili Reinhart, and Victoria Perfetti in Forbidden Fruits.

    There was a time when Dallas was a prime location for movies, whether it was for films set in and around the city, like Tender Mercies, or ones that used it to stand in for other locations, like Robocop. Dallas is getting its first notable shoutout in a long time thanks to the new film, Forbidden Fruits.

    Set mostly in a NorthPark Center-like location called Highland Place Mall, the film centers on a group of young women known as the Fruits. Apple (Lili Reinhart), Cherry (Victoria Perfetti), and Fig (Alexandra Shipp) all work at a clothing store called Free Eden, with the three of them essentially lording over everyone else in the mall. That includes Pumpkin (Lola Tung), who works at the pretzel store Sister Salt’s and who wants to join their group.

    Pumpkin soon discovers that, apart from being an entitled clique, the group also claims to be a coven of witches, with Apple especially using their combined power to get back at anyone who’s wronged them. When Pumpkin starts noticing Cherry and Fig going astray of the group’s code, she uses this knowledge to get in tighter with Apple, although she’s unprepared for how far Apple will go to protect her interests.

    Written and directed by Meredith Alloway (who grew up in Dallas and graduated from both Lake Highlands High School and SMU) and co-written by Lily Houghton, the film seems to have the aim of combining movies like Mean Girls and The Craft. The peer pressure of being part of an exclusive group is evident from the start, as Apple essentially forces the others to live by her code or be ostracized (or worse).

    One of the biggest problems the film runs into, though, is that any conflict comes from within the group itself. With no pressure coming from other friends, family, or co-workers, the group has to create its own drama. The story quickly gets redundant and stagnant, with almost no plot movement until the final act of the film, when it’s almost too late.

    Alloway is clearly aiming for a campy vibe with the film, but the execution leaves something to be desired. The four characters are established in a perfunctory manner, and even as they get fleshed out as the film goes along, there’s nothing to compare them with, so it’s as if they’re just acting off-the-wall in a vacuum.

    Those who know the Dallas area well will enjoy the local references (the women hail from Plano, Irving, Grapevine, and Highland Park), and Alloway makes sure to include the looming threat of a tornado into the plot. But since the film was actually filmed in Toronto, there are no visuals that make it feel like Texas, and so any goodwill she gets from setting the film in the city is muted by that lack.

    While Reinhart (Riverdale) and Shipp (Storm in X-Men movies) have been around longer, both Pedretti (You) and Tung (The Summer I Turned Pretty) have made big impressions on streaming shows in recent years. The foursome play off each other well even when the story is not that compelling.

    If there was a message in Forbidden Fruits that Alloway wanted to get across, she didn’t communicate it clearly enough. Her solid cast can only do so much to sell a story that doesn’t have enough on the bone to be filling. It would have been nice for the movie to be filmed in Dallas, but such is the way of the world in modern Hollywood.

    ---

    Forbidden Fruits opens in theaters on March 27.

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